Tiger Woods has officially ended 2013 without a major title after another poor showing on Day 4 of the PGA Championship.

The superstar was able to finish with a par score of 70 on the final day, but his inconsistency off the tee and on the green prevented him from finishing in the 60s for the first time in the tournament. In all, he finished four strokes over par for the event.

He came into Sunday at Oak Hill far from contention at four strokes over par, tied for 48th place. It was extremely unlikely he would make a run, but his bogey and double bogey on the eighth and ninth holes, respectively, ensured his spot way down the leaderboard.

Still, he was able to finish strong with a handful of birdies on the back nine. Here is a complete look at the scorecard for his final round:

Tiger Woods Scorecard - Round 4

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

Total

Par

4

4

3

5

4

3

4

4

4

35

Score

4

4

3

5

4

3

4

5

6

38

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

Total

Par

4

3

4

5

4

3

4

4

4

35

Score

4

3

3

5

3

2

4

4

4

32

PGA.com

This is obviously not close to the leaders of the tournament, as seen here:

Solid Start to the Day

Through the first seven holes, Woods was about as good as he had been all week. He avoided bad mistakes and was able to earn par on each hole. Considering the problems he had on the front nine in the first three rounds, this is quite impressive.

Unfortunately, he was unable to take advantage of strong approach shots due to more poor play on the greens.

Woods had a few birdie opportunities but wasted them with poor putts like this one on hole No. 4:

This was a theme throughout the weekend, as birdies were tough to come by for the 14-time major champion. Considering he has been one of the best on tour on the greens this season, the poor performance is quite surprising.

Things Take a Bad Turn on No. 8

After starting the day with seven pars, he had a terrible finish to the front nine before the turn. A bogey on the eighth hole and then a double bogey on the ninth put him at seven over for the tournament.

In both cases, the issue seemed to be a lack of concentration on his putting. Here is a terrible miss for bogey on No. 9:

Shane Bacon of Yahoo! Sports recaps Woods' less-than-stellar play in the first half of the round:

Tiger had 19 putts on the front nine, including that three-putt on the 9th for a double-bogey.

It certainly seems like more people complain about injuries in sports when they are losing compared to winning. However, it remains to be seen whether this potential ailment turns out to be serious.

Regardless of what could be bothering Woods, it certainly did not negatively affect him last week while he was winning the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational.

Mark Konezny-USA TODAY Sports

Looking Forward

There will be many who question Woods' performance after he failed to win a single major this season. However, he already has five titles on the season and is well on his way to winning another Player of the Year award.

It is also not as though the two wins at the World Golf Championship as well as The Players Championship should be overlooked either.

As far as the potential to still catch Jack Nicklaus' record of 18 majors, ESPN's Jeremy Schaap has some positive stats:

At the earliest, Tiger will win major #15 at 38, after winning #14 at 32. Good news? After turning 38, Nicklaus won four (each one once).